Thailand’s “Land Bridge” Plan: Bypassing the Malacca Strait, Saving Up to 5 Days

Thailand’s “Land Bridge” Plan: Bypassing the Malacca Strait, Saving Up to 5 Days

Thailand’s “Land Bridge” Plan: Bypassing the Malacca Strait, Saving Up to 5 Days

Thailand is currently pushing a major logistics project known as the Land Bridge, with a total investment of over RM120 billion.

In simple terms, the plan is to build two deep-sea ports in southern Thailand—one facing the Andaman Sea and the other the Gulf of Thailand—connected by a road and rail network across the peninsula.

This means cargo ships no longer need to pass through the Malacca Strait. Instead, goods can be unloaded on one side, transported across land, and shipped out from the other side.

👉 The result is straightforward:
Routes from the Middle East to East Asia could save up to 5 days in transit time.

 

Why is Thailand doing this?

The reasoning is quite simple:

  • Global instability is increasing risks along major shipping routes
  • Key chokepoints may become controlled or even subject to fees
  • Countries cannot rely on a single shipping lane anymore

So Thailand aims to create an alternative route to strengthen its logistics security and strategic influence.

 

How will the project work?

  • Budget: ~1 trillion THB (≈ RM122.5 billion)
  • Location: Chumphon & Ranong provinces
  • Key components:
    • 2 deep-sea ports
    • ~90 km rail + road connection

The key highlight:
👉 The government will not fully fund it
👉 It will rely on international bidding + private sector investment

 

What impact will it have on shipping?

If completed, it could:

  • Reduce congestion in the Malacca Strait
  • Position Thailand as a regional logistics hub
  • Give shipping companies an alternative route (not just one option)

 

In one sentence:

Thailand is making a move to gain more control in global shipping, aiming to become a new transit hub connecting the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean.